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Intensive English Mastery Course: Animated Beginner's Course
Last updated 3/2023
Created by Logus Academy
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English + subtitle | Duration: 63 Lectures ( 76h 59m ) | Size: 43 GB

Intensive English course. 77 Hours of English language speaking, English listening practice. Animated Cartoons



What you'll learn
You will learn over 1000 vital English words, expressions and idioms, and how to use them in real life.
You will learn the most important English grammar with tons of English-speaking practice.
You will learn to think in English and to speak English fluently. (in Intermediate level)
You will learn to read in English and to spell English words intuitively
You will learn to understand movies and TV shows in English.
After the course, you can travel the world freely, without a language barrier
After the course, you can start preparing for English language tests like TOEFL, IELTS, GMAT etc.

Requirements
A computer, or a tablet, or a phone with good speakers or headphones. (So you can hear the pronunciation very clearly).
Absolutely no previous knowledge of English is necessary.
4 hours a week to speak English when you won't be disturbed.
Very positive attitude :)

Description
Introducing the LOGUS Intensive English Mastery Course-your ultimate gateway to mastering the English language!This dynamic and engaging online English course is designed for complete beginners who want to rapidly elevate their English language skills to the intermediate level of spoken English, in the shortest time possible.Why LOGUS Stands Out as the Best English Course:- Comprehensive English Learning: Unlike other basic courses, LOGUS is a full, beginner-to-intermediate English language program that focuses on practical, real-world English skills. You'll be prepared to use English confidently in your everyday life.- Fun and Interactive: LOGUS is a 100% animated, interactive spoken English course, making learning not just effective, but fun and exciting!- Intensive Practice: With over 77 hours of spoken English language practice, each lesson lasts about 1.5 hours. You'll speak English constantly, using more than 2,000 words per lesson.- Focus on Fluency: LOGUS is obsessed with your fluency. It doesn't just teach you isolated words or phrases-it's designed to ensure you can speak English confidently and naturally. Fluency is our top priority!- Simple Grammar: English grammar is broken down in an intuitive, easy-to-understand way, with loads of examples and hours of speaking and listening practice.- Multilingual Support: All English vocabulary and grammar explanations are translated into English, Spanish, Brazilian Portuguese, and Hindi, ensuring you fully grasp each concept.Whether you're starting from zero or aiming to improve your fluency fast, the LOGUS Intensive English Mastery Course is the ultimate tool to supercharge your English language journey!

Who this course is for
It is a must-have English course for complete beginners, who want to reach the intermediate level of spoken English in the shortest time possible.



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Java 21 Real Classes
Published 10/2024
Created by Danijel Jelenic
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 48 Lectures ( 98h 30m ) | Size: 46.7 GB

Java 21 programming



What you'll learn

Learn computer basics
Learn Java Programming
Learn Object Oriented Programming
Learn computer communication
Be able to apply for any programming job
Be able to pass Oracle Java Certificate exam
Learn Database and SQL

Requirements

No programming experience needed. You will learn everything you need in this class.

Description

These are the real classes IÂ done with real students. They are un-edited in any way. You will be able to see the entire process of learning from scratch and hear student questions as they themself are just beginning to understand. Many of those questions you would probably ask yourself. These is no prerequisites for those classes. IÂ assume you don't know anything about computers and programming. However, in order to understand programming, it's essential to understand how computer works. That's why first part covers computer basics like memory, HDD and CPU. It also covers basics of how computer works and how it communicates with us humans through character encodings.Second part covers basics of Java language like primitive data types and flow control and loops. You will be able to write simple programs and output the result to a console.Third part covers Object Oriented Programming. This is a concept that takes real life objects and implements them as part of computer code. You will be able to understand how computer handle real life problems through objects.Fourth part covers programming concepts, and it follows development of small programs.Fifth part covers introduction to GUI development. You will learn what are the parts of the GUIÂ and how to create simple GUI applications.Sixth part is a practical development, and it covers complete development of popular snake game. It covers development of the game from the beginning to the end.Seventh part is more advanced GUIÂ development where you will develop small applications like Calculator and your own personal Notepad. It covers advanced GUIÂ development and after that you will be able to write your own GUIÂ applications.Eith part covers databases and SQL language. You will be able to create your own database and create your own tables. You will learn about relational databases and be able to connect to it from your code. Databases are essential to any meaningful programming. You will create simple programs to insert data into database, to modify and delete.Nineth part covers Spring boot and API. APIÂ is used for computer-to-computer communication and in this part, you will learn how computers communicate between each other. You will be able to use free public APIÂ and write your own programs to communicate with other computers on internet.

Who this course is for

For everyone that wants to learn programming but don't have any knowledge or experience at all.



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TTC - Great American Short Stories: A Guide for Readers and Writers
Last updated 1/2024
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 24 Lessons ( 12h 58m ) | Size: 10.7 GB

Short stories offer readers the unique opportunity to experience a powerful piece of literature in a deceptively small package. The constraints of a few thousand words can give the best works an economy of storytelling that distills the power of the written word in astonishing ways. The brevity of short fiction belies its emotional and intellectual complexity.

While short stories exist in traditions all over the world, American short stories are a genre all their own. Emerging from the clash of cultures-and the collision of oral and print traditions-that began during the arrival of European settlers in the 16th and 17th centuries, the short works that emerged have served many functions. They have entertained, certainly, but they have also helped foster identity, shape morality, and build the foundations of the American mythos for nearly four centuries.

Whether you want to write short stories, simply want better insight as a reader, or even if you are looking for a new lens through which to view American history, the 24 rich and informative lectures of Great American Short Stories: A Guide for Writers and Readers will show you the ins and outs of this infinitely adaptable-and intrinsically American-literary form. Professor Jennifer Cognard-Black of St. Mary's College of Maryland guides you through the technical aspects of the short story, while also digging deep into the history of the form in the United States. Along the way, you will discover why the short story became so deeply connected to American identity and how it continues to evolve alongside the nation itself.

American Mythos

Literary traditions have helped shape American identity from the very beginning. When the United States established its independence from Britain, one of the earliest concerns of the new nation was creating a literature of its own, one free from the powerful influence of Europe. Writers tried their hand at many forms, but only one emerged as a patently American genre: the short story. Much like the nation itself, the American short story has continually changed and evolved to reflect the ideas, conflicts, and demographics of each era.

After a brief introduction to the short story as a literary form, Professor Cognard-Black leads you through the evolution of the short story, beginning with the influence of the oral tradition in the earliest days of the American colonies, proceeding to the initial story experiments after the Revolutionary War, and then traversing the many changes in style and taste that have defined and redefined the genre with every new generation of Americans. Some of the prominent literary periods and styles you will tour include

Sentimental fiction. The early- to mid-19th century saw the rise of fiction that intentionally stirred emotion to sway readers' hearts and minds, utilizing sentiment as an effective tool in shaping the way Americans thought about slavery, temperance, class relations, social justice, and more. This period was also defined by the rising power of female writers.
Realism. The school that would eventually be called realism held sway from the end of the Civil War and into World War I. Closely tied to the growth of print journalism across the nation, realism was a "boys' club" that resisted the activism of sentimental storytelling in favor of immediacy-even banality-to pursue truth that some writers saw as more democratic than earlier styles.
Modernism. In the wake of World War I, many Americans were disillusioned about the state of the modern world. In response, this new school of writers turned away from realism, leaning in to an intentionally fragmented and artificial style that some considered more "literary" than realism, but that also managed to capture the rapidly changing, disorienting atmosphere of the early 20th century.
These and other phases of literary production in America are reflective of the social and political climate of their time and place. As you progress from traditional stories into more experimental styles and genres, you will see how each generation tests the limits of the short story form. And, with guidance from Professor Cognard-Black, you will see how each of these loosely defined periods can give readers a unique view into the American character through fiction.

Form and Function

Storytelling has a direct influence on the brain, triggering the release of the feel-good chemical oxytocin. This chemical reaction means good stories affect us profoundly, giving stories immense power to influence how we see the world and the people in it. But this impact can only be maintained if readers truly believe in what they're experiencing, which is why the best short story writers manage to disappear from their work. Essentially, every aspect of a story must be tightly controlled and deeply considered, yet the author's fingerprints should be completely absent from the page. This invisibility on the part of the writer is accomplished through the many choices made when crafting a story.

Even the most fantastic elements of a story need to feel true to life in order for readers to find a connection. So how do you use fiction to create a world that is believable-one that feels true but is also more interesting than the mundane realities of everyday life? And how do you make a short story feel like it contains an entire world over the course of just a few pages? The answer lies in how writers use the tools of the trade to create work that feels effortless, but actually requires a great deal of thought and planning. Some of the technical aspects to consider include

Setting/donnée. The world in which the story takes place has to be immersive and believable. The donnée ("that which is given") is not just the scenery, but the very fabric of the story; it is intrinsic to the characters themselves and their point of view.
Character. Fictional characters must be both vital and true. In other words, you must not just show how your characters function in a given story but also find a way to reveal who they are when no one else is looking.
Dialogue. Believable dialogue in fiction works differently than speech in the real world. Writers must tread a fine line between what is concise and engaging and what reads as true to life.
Point of view. Who is telling the story? Is it told from the interior perspective of a single narrator? Does it step back and look at the larger picture? Point of view directly affects how readers engage with a story and where their sympathies lie.
Style. Though difficult to define, style is at the core of what it means to be a storyteller. Essentially, it is the culmination of all the many aspects that define the craft and how each writer puts them to use in unique ways.
As you will see throughout the lectures, these and other tools can be taught, but to truly understand them, you have to put them into practice. As Professor Cognard-Black says, "The only way to know the nuts and bolts, as well as the power, of American short stories is to read them; the only way to craft a story worth telling is to write them."

Style and Substance

Over the course of these lectures, you will be introduced to a range of writers who have shaped the American short story around the country and across generations. Beginning with the early sketches of Washington Irving, you will progress through the centuries to engage with work from writers of different styles, eras, origins, and levels of fame, including

Writers who use genre fiction to tell stories about the real world, like Edgar Allan Poe, Louisa May Alcott, and Ursula K. Le Guin;
Authors who specialize in realist and naturalist stories, such as Mark Twain, Kate Chopin, and Edith Wharton, as well as more experimental authors like Jean Toomer and Donald Barthelme;
Writers who have shaped the very fabric of literature in America, such as Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner; and
Contemporary short story writers that engage with the many complicated facets of the American experience, including Toni Morrison, Jhumpa Lahiri, and Annie Proulx.
These authors and many, many more offer you an introduction to a wide range of small stories with big impact. And you will explore not just their stories, but also the larger movements and cultural influences that shaped their work and that have helped to make American short stories an ongoing, interconnected-and increasingly democratic-narrative of the American experience.

The "great American novel" is often the lofty goal of writers who want to achieve literary immortality. But from the opening sentence to the lingering denouement, American short stories can both capture the world as it is and help envision what could be. Each is unique, and yet each is a part of a larger chronicle: the story of America.

What Will You Learn?
Understand how the technical aspects of writing work and how different authors use different techniques to create their own unique style.

Get insight into modern forms such as microfiction and graphic storytelling.

Compare and contrast numerous authors and individual stories to truly understand how they work.


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TTC - Queen of the Sciences: A History of Mathematics
Last updated 7/2024
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 24 Lessons ( 12h 17m ) | Size: 10.3 GB

In the 17th century, the great scientist and mathematician Galileo Galilei noted that the book of nature "cannot be understood unless one first learns to comprehend the language and read the characters in which it is written. It is written in the language of mathematics, and its characters are triangles, circles, and other geometric figures, without which it is not humanly possible to understand a single word of it."

For at least 4,000 years of recorded history, humans have engaged in the study of mathematics. Our progress in this field is a gripping narrative, a never-ending search for hidden patterns in numbers, a philosopher's quest for the ultimate meaning of mathematical relationships, a chronicle of amazing progress in practical fields like engineering and economics, a tale of astonishing scientific discoveries, a fantastic voyage into realms of abstract beauty, and a series of fascinating personal profiles of individuals such as

Archimedes, the greatest of all Greek mathematicians, who met his death in 212 B.C. at the hands of a Roman soldier while he was engrossed in a problem
Evariste Galois, whose stormy life in 19th-century radical French politics was cut short by a duel at age 20-but not before he laid the foundations for a new branch of modern algebra called Galois theory
Srinivasa Ramanujan, an impoverished college dropout in India who sent his extraordinary equations to the famous English mathematician G. H. Hardy in 1913 and was subsequently recognized as a genius
An inquiring mind is all you need to embark on this supreme intellectual adventure in The Queen of the Sciences: A History of Mathematics, which contains 24 illuminating lectures taught by award-winning Professor of Mathematics David M. Bressoud.

The "Queen of the Sciences"

The history of mathematics concerns one of the most magnificent, surprising, and powerful of all human achievements. In the early 19th century, the noted German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss called mathematics the "queen of the sciences" because it was so successful at uncovering the nature of physical reality. Gauss's observation is even more accurate in today's age of quantum physics, string theory, chaos theory, information technology, and other mathematics-intensive disciplines that have transformed the way we understand and deal with the world.

The Queen of the Sciences takes you from ancient Mesopotamia-where the Pythagorean theorem was already in use more than 1,000 years before the Greek thinker Pythagoras traditionally proved it-to the Human Genome Project, which uses sophisticated mathematical techniques to decipher the 3 billion letters of the human genetic code.

Along the way, you meet a remarkable range of individuals whose love of numbers, patterns, and shapes created the grand edifice that is mathematics. These include astrologers, lawyers, a poet, a cult leader, a tax assessor, the author of the most popular textbook ever written, a high school teacher, a blind grandfather, an artist, and several prodigies who died too young.

You find the problems and ideas that preoccupied them can be stated with the utmost simplicity

Is there a method for finding all the prime numbers below a given number? (Eratosthenes, c. 200 B.C.)
The equation xn + yn = zn has no whole-number solutions where n is greater than 2. (Pierre de Fermat, 1637)
What would it mean if space is non-Euclidean; that is, if it is not flat as described by Euclid? (János Bolyai, 1832)
The second of these propositions, called Fermat's last theorem, is one of the most famous in mathematics. It was followed by this postscript in the book where Fermat jotted it down: "I have a truly marvelous demonstration, which this margin is too narrow to contain." Since Fermat never wrote out his proof, his statement served as a tantalizing challenge to succeeding generations of mathematicians.

The difficult road to a proof of Fermat's last theorem is a theme that surfaces throughout the last half of this course. Among other intriguing facts, you learn that Circle Limit III, a mathematically inspired woodcut by the Dutch artist M. C. Escher, relates directly to the technique that eventually showed the way to a solution by mathematician Andrew Wiles in 1994.

See Mathematics in Context

Professor Bressoud begins the course by defining mathematics as the study of the abstraction of patterns. Mathematics arises from patterns observed in the world, usually patterns expressed in terms of number and spatial relationships. Furthermore, it is a human endeavor found in every culture extending back as far as records go.

The Queen of the Sciences focuses on the European tradition that grew out of early mathematics in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Greece. The first eight lectures examine these foundations and the contributions of India, China, and the Islamic world, which played important roles in the development of European mathematical achievements. For example

The earliest recorded use of zero as a placeholder was found in a Hindu temple in Cambodia constructed in A.D. 683. Zero had been used a few decades earlier by the Indian astronomer Brahmagupta not as a placeholder but as a number that could be manipulated.
An approximation for pi of 355/113 was developed in the 5th century by the Chinese astronomer Zu Chongzhi. Correct to seven decimal places, this approximation would remain the most accurate estimate for more than 1,000 years.
The first treatise on al-jabr (restoring) and al-muqabala (comparing)-the process of solving an algebraic equation-was written in A.D. 825 by the Islamic mathematician Abu Jafar al-Kwarizmi. Al-jabr eventually would become the word "algebra" and al-Kwarizmi would become the word "algorithm."
The next eight lectures show how Western Europe, beginning in the late Middle Ages, gathered existing mathematical ideas and refined them into new and powerful tools. The heart of this section is five lectures on the 17th century, when the separate threads of geometry, algebra, and trigonometry began to meld into a cohesive whole, one whose fruits included the creation of calculus by Isaac Newton and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz.

Calculus is another recurring theme throughout this course, making its first appearance in the method of exhaustion developed by the ancient Greeks. In the early 17th century, John Napier initiated the idea of logarithms, which added to the examples from which the general rules of calculus emerged. You discover how, in his ceaseless toying with his new invention, Napier chanced on a base that is the equivalent to the modern base of the natural logarithm used in calculus: the famous number now known as e (2.71828 ... ).

After studying the 18th-century contributions of Leonhard Euler-possibly the greatest mathematician who ever lived-you look at how art has influenced geometry and all of mathematics. You investigate mosaics from the Alhambra, prints by M. C. Escher and Albrecht Dürer, and other intriguing shapes and forms.

In the final eight lectures, you explore selected mathematical developments of the past 200 years, including

Joseph Fourier's solution in the early 1800s to the problem of modeling heat flow, which led to a powerful technique called Fourier analysis for making sense of a wide range of complex physical phenomena
Bernhard Riemann's new system of geometry in the mid-1800s, which provided a framework for the revolutionary conception of space developed by Albert Einstein in his general theory of relativity
Grigori Perelman's recent, startling solution to the Poincaré conjecture proposed by Henri Poincaré in 1904, which earned Perelman the prestigious Fields Medal (which the reclusive Russian mathematician declined)

Learn with an Experienced Teacher

Experienced in teaching mathematics to students of all levels, Professor Bressoud was a Peace Corps volunteer in the West Indies before earning his Ph.D., where he taught mathematics and science to intermediate students. In addition, he has written numerous articles on mathematics education and related issues, including four textbooks that draw heavily on the history of mathematics.

His depth of knowledge and passion for teaching mathematics-which earned him the Mathematical Association of America's Allegheny Mountain Section Distinguished Teaching Award-make your journey through the story of mathematics all the more riveting and exciting.

Mathematics has exhibited an inexhaustible power to illuminate aspects of the universe that have been cloaked in mystery. In charting the storied history of its evolution, The Queen of the Sciences not only illustrates how these mysteries were revealed but exposes, with a wealth of insight, the enormous efforts that went into deciphering our natural world.


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Next.js & Mern Stack, Create an AI-Powered News Website
Published 10/2024
Created by aryan Kumar
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 280 Lectures ( 58h 52m ) | Size: 31.3 GB

Step-by-Step Guide to Building News Portals with Nextjs,React, Node.js APIs, Material UI & MongoDB



What you'll learn
Build a Full-Stack News Portal
Master Nextjs & React
Develop Robust Nodejs APIs
Implement Authentication & Authorization with NextAuth
Admin, User, and Editor Dashboards
Protected Pages & Middleware
Get Real-Time Stock Prices Using Rapid API
Premium Content with Stripe Payment Gateway
Responsive Design & User Experience
SEO Optimization
Category & Subcategory Based News
Trending & Missed News
Banners
Live News TV & Podcasts
Newsletters News
Commenting System with Likes, Replies, and More
Social Sharing & Copy to Clipboard
Image & Video Library
User, Editor, and Admin Profile Management
Live News & Podcast Integration
Site Settings Management
Managing User Roles
Adding Snackbar Functionality
Email Sending Feature
Change Password & Password Reset
Context API
Mastering CRUD Functionality
Dynamic Image Uploads & Bulk Uploader
News Management
And more

Requirements
Basic Knowledge of JavaScript
Material-Ui
HTML and CSS Fundamentals
Basic Understanding of Web Development
Nodejs Basics
Nextjs Basics
Reactjs Basics
Mongodb Bascis
Git and Version Control
Computer
Code Editor
Nodejs and npm
Git
responsive design
bootstrap basics

Description
Build a Full-Stack News Portal:Create a comprehensive news portal from scratch using Next.js, Node.js, Express, and MongoDB, covering all essential features.Master Next.js & React:Gain expertise in Next.js and React to build dynamic, server-side rendered applications for your news portal.Develop Robust Node.js APIs:Design and implement RESTful APIs using Node.js, and integrate them seamlessly with your news portal.Implement Authentication & Authorization with NextAuth:Secure your application by integrating NextAuth for user authentication, and create separate login pages for users, editors, and admins.Admin, User, and Editor Dashboards:Create and manage different dashboards tailored for admins, editors, and users, with role-based access control.Protected Pages & Middleware:Implement middleware to protect sensitive pages, ensuring only authorized users can access them.Get Real-Time Stock Prices Using Rapid API:Integrate third-party APIs to fetch and display real-time stock prices on your news portal.Premium Content with Stripe Payment Gateway:Set up a subscription-based model for premium news content, integrating Stripe for secure payment processing.Responsive Design & User Experience:Ensure your news portal is fully responsive and offers a seamless experience across all devices.SEO Optimization:Optimize your news portal for search engines to enhance visibility and attract more visitors.Category & Subcategory Based News:Organize news content by categories and subcategories, making it easy for users to find relevant news.Trending & Missed News Banners:Implement dynamic sections for trending news and missed news to keep your users engaged.Live News TV & Podcasts:Add live news TV streaming and podcast news features to offer diverse content formats.Newsletters:Enable users to subscribe to newsletters and receive regular updates via email.Commenting System with Likes, Replies, and More:Implement a robust commenting system where users can comment, like, reply, and engage with the content.Social Sharing & Copy to Clipboard:Allow users to easily share news on Facebook, Gmail, LinkedIn, Reddit, Twitter, WhatsApp, and more, with a simple copy-to-clipboard feature.Image & Video Library:Integrate media libraries to manage and display images and videos across your news portal.User, Editor, and Admin Profile Management:Build profile management systems for users, editors, and admins, allowing them to manage their personal information and settings.Live News & Podcast Integration:provide real-time news updates and podcast integrations to enhance user engagement.Site Settings Management:Configure and manage site-wide settings, including theme customization, site content management, and other administrative configurations.News Management:Efficiently manage news articles, including creating, editing, and deleting content.Dynamic Image Uploads & Bulk Uploader:Implement dynamic image uploads and bulk image upload functionalities for easy media management.Mastering CRUD Functionality:Learn to implement create, read, update, and delete operations effectively within your application.Context API:Utilize React's Context API for state management and improve data sharing across components.Change Password & Password Reset:Implement options for users to change their passwords and manage forgotten passwords with reset functionality.Email Sending Feature:Integrate email functionality to send notifications, confirmations, and other messages.Adding Snackbar Functionality:Use Snackbar notifications to provide feedback and alerts to users within the application.Managing User Roles:Handle user roles and permissions to control access and functionality based on user type.AI-Generated Content: Enhance your news portal with AI-generated content, ensuring a continuous flow of up-to-date and engaging news articles for your audience.

Who this course is for
Web Developers
Intermediate Web Developers
Frontend Developers
Backend Developers
Full-Stack Developers
Tech Enthusiasts
Students and Educators
Freelance Developers



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Master Medical Device Development & Risk Management Course
Published 10/2024
MP4 | Video: h264, 1920x1080 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 23.61 GB | Duration: 13h 27m

Become a Medical device development and risk management expert inline with ISO 14971:2019



What you'll learn
By completing this course you will gain a comprehensive knowledge of medical device development and risk management per ISO 14971:2019
Understand when and how to apply risk management through a the medical device lifecycle.
Understand how to plan a medical device development.
Gain a deep understanding of medical device design controls and systems engineering principles.
Understand how ISO 14971 relates to other important international standards including IEC 60601, IEC 62304 and ISO 13485.
Have a clear understand how to easily document design control and risk management activities.

Requirements
While prior experience in medical devices or risk management is beneficial, the course is structured to provide foundational knowledge and advanced insights. Both beginners and experienced professionals will benefit from the material.

Description
This comprehensive course provides an in-depth education on the application of risk management per ISO 14971:2019 during the design and development of medical devices.You will learn to avoid the major mistakes people make that stifle new medical device product developments. Access countless practical examples providing you with the knowledge to easily develop safe and effective medical devices in the fastest possible time. Peek behind the curtain at our medical device templates documentation pack designed to make your regulatory submissions a walk in the park.This course is designed for working professionals in the medical device industry, including (electronic, mechanical, system, firmware) engineers, software developers, firmware developers, data scientists, quality assurance specialists, regulatory affairs professionals, project managers, and others involved in medical device development and compliance.The course is fully aligned with ISO 14971:2019, the international standard for the application of risk management to medical devices. You will learn how to apply each phase of the risk management process outlined in the standard to medical device design and development.It is recommended to complete the course over 5 days, taking about 4 hours a day to complete, and upon successful completion, participants will be proficient in medical device development & the application of medical device risk management over the entire medical-device lifecycle.Start your journey today to become a medical device development & risk management expert.

Overview
Section 1: Why is Risk Management Important ?

Lecture 1 What you will learn ?

Lecture 2 Course Introduction

Lecture 3 What is RISK ?

Lecture 4 Medical Devices and Risk

Lecture 5 What is a MEDICAL DEVICE?

Lecture 6 What is RISK MANAGEMENT?

Lecture 7 MEDICAL DEVICE Failures

Lecture 8 MEDICAL DEVICE BENEFITS

Lecture 9 ISO 14971 and the CFR/MDR

Section 2: Medical Device Development

Lecture 10 Chapter 2 Course Notes

Lecture 11 The LIFECYCLE

Lecture 12 Design & Development Overview

Lecture 13 ISO 14971 and ISO 13485

Lecture 14 Phase Strategy

Lecture 15 Planning

Lecture 16 Documentation and RECORD-Keeping

Lecture 17 INTENDED USE

Lecture 18 USER NEEDS & VALIDATION

Lecture 19 REQUIREMENTS and Architecture

Lecture 20 SYSTEM Architecture

Lecture 21 Phase Strategy for a Complex Product

Lecture 22 Design PROCESS and DESIGN OUTPUTS

Lecture 23 VERIFICATION

Lecture 24 Is our Digital Thermometer Safe?

Lecture 25 Design Traceability

Lecture 26 Document Templates

Lecture 27 Product Development Plan Template

Lecture 28 User Needs Specification Template

Lecture 29 Product Requirements Document Template

Lecture 30 Product Detailed Design Specification Template

Lecture 31 Design Verification Test Protocol Template

Lecture 32 Design Verification Test Report Template

Lecture 33 Design Review Template

Lecture 34 Common Questions

Section 3: Risk Management per ISO 14971

Lecture 35 Download Chapter 3 Notes

Lecture 36 RISK ASSESSMENT

Lecture 37 RISK ANALYSIS

Lecture 38 REASONABLY FORESEEABLE MISUSE

Lecture 39 Characteristics Related to Safety

Lecture 40 HAZARDS

Lecture 41 Quantitative Probability Estimation

Lecture 42 Qualitative Probability Estimation

Lecture 43 SEVERITY of HARM

Lecture 44 Advice from the Trenches

Lecture 45 Evaluating RISK

Lecture 46 RISK CONTROL

Lecture 47 Verify RISK CONTROL

Lecture 48 RESIDUAL RISK

Lecture 49 RISKS arising from RISK CONTROL measures

Lecture 50 Completing RISK MANAGEMENT

Lecture 51 Documentation Templates

Lecture 52 A List of Common HAZARDS

Lecture 53 Other International Standards

Lecture 54 FMEA and ISO14971 (Part 1)

Lecture 55 FMEA and ISO14971 (Part 2)

Section 4: Production and Post-Production

Lecture 56 Download Chapter 4 Notes

Lecture 57 LIFECYCLE (Recap)

Lecture 58 RISK CONTROLS in Production & Post-Production

Lecture 59 PFMEA

Lecture 60 Information

Lecture 61 Information Review

Lecture 62 Actions

Lecture 63 Implementing Reviews and Actions

Lecture 64 Data Collection

Lecture 65 BUG-Tracking Procedure

Lecture 66 Change Control Procedure

Lecture 67 RISK MANAGEMENT In POST-PRODUCTION Example

This course is designed for working professionals in the medical device industry, including (electronic, mechanical, system, firmware) engineers, software developers, firmware developers, data scientists, quality assurance specialists, regulatory affairs professionals, project managers, and others involved in medical device development and compliance.



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CBTNuggets - Layer 2 CCIE Training: VLAN, EtherChannel & STP Tutorial
Released 2/2024
MP4 | Video: h264, 1920x1080 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 191 Lessons ( 29h 53m ) | Size: 28.3 GB

This expert Layer 2 CCIE tutorial teaches network engineers about advanced VLAN topics like trunking, VLAN databases, and VTP; implement LACP and EtherChannel Misconfiguration Guard; and decide between PVST+, Rapid PVST+, and MST.

Sitting at the top of the Cisco pyramid of IT knowledge is the CCIE. Cisco's Certified Internetworking Expert is earned by people at the top of their career, with years of deep specialization. There are six different CCIEs, offered to engineers specializing in six fields: Collaboration, Data Center, Enterprise Infrastructure, Enterprise Wireless, Security, and Service Provider.

This advanced Spanning Tree Protocol training is designed to prepare you to work with layer 2 technologies in the most advanced environments possible. Since one of the two CCIE exams is entirely practical, this course focuses on the practical skills around planning, managing, and troubleshooting VLANs, EtherChannel, and STP in its most advanced configurations and deployments.

Once you're done with this Cisco skills training, you'll know how to design, deploy, and operate layer 2 technologies within complex enterprise networks.

For managers with Cisco products, this Cisco training can be used to onboard new network engineers, curated into individual or team training plans, or as a Cisco reference resource.

Layer 2 CCIE Training: What You Need to Know
This CCIE tutorial has videos that cover topics including

Deploying and managing advanced STP configurations
Understanding native VLANs
Implementing discovery protocols, such as CDP and LLDP
Enabling load balancing over redundant links with MST

Who Should Take This CCIE Tutorial?
This CCIE tutorial is considered professional-level Cisco training, which means it was designed for network engineers. This Cisco networking course will validate the extensive experience most network engineers have with layer 2 technologies.

New or aspiring network engineers. If you're just starting to get your feet under you as a network engineer, courses like this will help you define your career. The best long-term preparation for your career is to familiarize yourself with advanced configurations of protocol as early as possible and keep returning to them to build up familiarity throughout your career.

Experienced network engineers. Some network engineers with years of experience don't think they need certifications. This course isn't exclusively exam prep - it's focused first and foremost on guaranteeing you can deploy and manage layer 2 technologies in complex enterprise environments.



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TTC - Field Guide to North American Wildlife
Released 11/2023
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 12 Lessons ( 5h 36m ) | Size: 4.68 GB



Wildlife is all around us in North America: in the air, on land, underwater. Not only are these animals astounding and fascinating to see, but they're also more important to our survival than most of us realize.

There's a fantastic array of native mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, and invertebrates that populate the North American continent. Consider

Wild Native Bees, of which there are approximately 4,000 species that have existed in North America for millennia;
American Alligators, whose bite is the force equivalent of the weight of two concert grand pianos; or
Wild Salmon, who travel as far as 1,800 miles up North American streams to spawn.
And those are just three of the many remarkable species out there. Some of them you may not know as well as you think you do, and others you've probably never heard of. All of them play an important role in our ecosystem. As human activity takes a heavy toll on the natural ecosystems we depend on, it's more important than ever to understand native species and why their survival is so imperative.

In Field Guide to North American Wildlife, join author and television host David Mizejewski, a naturalist with the National Wildlife Federation, for a fascinating 12-lecture course that focuses on 12 wild animals found throughout North America. You'll meet a two-foot-long salamander that breathes through its skin. You'll follow a single monarch butterfly on its astounding 3,000-mile journey from southern Canada to central Mexico. You'll discover how black bears may offer key insights into human health, and so much more. This course is a chance to experience the beauty and wonder of these incredible animals and to learn why safeguarding their future is so crucial to our own.

Incredible Insights into Incredible Animals

Your experience of Field Guide to North American Wildlife will be like a virtual zoo that you can tour at your leisure. The 12 fascinating animals featured in this course reveal great insights into the animal kingdom that will have you appreciating these animals in entirely new ways. A few of the species you'll meet include

Monarch Butterflies: In most cases, the monarch butterfly only lives in its adult butterfly form for a few weeks, just long enough to complete the reproductive process. The generation of monarchs that migrates, however, is an important exception to this rule. These monarchs live some eight times as long as the generation that preceded theirs. And as small and delicate as they are, they're strong enough to fly from southern Canada all the way to their wintering grounds in Mexico.
Leatherback Sea Turtles: These turtles can maintain a body temperature of around 79 degrees Fahrenheit despite the conditions around them-something no other living reptile can do. How? Rather than generating heat metabolically via internal core body functions, leatherbacks generate it kinetically through the constant pumping of the muscles that power their massive flippers. Because of this, some leatherbacks can even be found north of the Arctic Circle.
Screech Owls: One way to spot these tiny, elusive owls is to look for mobbing songbirds. When a group of songbirds locates a screech owl (or any owl, for that matter), they'll gather all around it, alarm calling and swooping close to the owl. When songbirds mob like this, they're trying to scare off a potential ambush predator by letting it know that its cover has been blown. Screech owls, however, tend to be indifferent to these mobs if they aren't actively hunting.
Salamanders: An underappreciated group of animals, salamanders are actually some of the most common and numerous types of vertebrate wildlife in many of our ecosystems. In fact, if you added up the biomass from salamanders in many eastern forests, it would equal the biomass of all the other vertebrate wildlife of all species living in that forest. So why are salamanders so infrequently seen by most people? Because they live in places out of sight to us, including underwater-like where the giant hellbender salamander lives.

Wild Tales of Struggle and Survival

David can tell you plenty about these animals (and does), but what makes Field Guide to North American Wildlife such a fascinating learning experience is that he also gives you a sense of what it's like to be one of these wild animals.

A powerful way to help people appreciate wild animals, and the challenges they often face in coexisting with us, is to show people what the world must look like through their eyes. Admittedly, we can't know exactly what animals think and feel; but through the imaginative power of storytelling, we can learn their point of view about some of the things they experience.

Each lecture of the course includes a fictional story based on the real-life behavior of the animal species, explaining its behavior, habitat, and daily struggles for survival. Among the characters you will meet are

Chanifir is a red wolf who's recently left her family pack and followed the impulse to find a mate and, with him, claim a territory and establish a new pack.
Zenya is a blue orchard mason bee who flees her habitat in a brush pile and sets out gathering mud to build a nesting tunnel in an old log.
Mauchy is a black bear who wanders through a New Jersey neighborhood in search of things to eat and finds himself face to face with humans.
Taya is a javelina whose encounter with unleashed dogs illustrates how this incredible animal tries to defend itself from danger.
By the end of Field Guide to North American Wildlife, you'll feel like you've finished an adventure into the wild. More than that, you'll come away with a newfound appreciation of, and concern for, our planet and the many incredible varieties of life that step across its soils, swim through its rivers and seas, and soar along its breezes.

What Will You Learn?
Learn how to spot red wolves in the wild based on their tracks and kill remains

Discover the reasons why wild salmon are so important for land ecosystems

Explore ways you can play a part in helping horseshoe crabs survive as a species

Consider the reasons why Virginia opossums have greatly expanded their range

Find out what you should, and shouldn't do, when you encounter a black bear



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TTC - Ancient Wisdom for the Modern World
Released 6/2023
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 10 Lessons ( 3h 25m ) | Size: 3.23 GB

Close your eyes and imagine a world without convenience. No cars. No air conditioning. No social media. No ease whatsoever. Sure, life would be a million times harder and more dangerous without advanced medicine and technology...

Close your eyes and imagine a world without convenience. No cars. No air conditioning. No social media. No ease whatsoever. Sure, life would be a million times harder and more dangerous without advanced medicine and technology. But we'd also avoid the maladies that plague developed societies today-diseases of immobility, processed foods, even loneliness. To be sure, if we lived just a little more like the ancients, there's a good chance we'd be happier, less distracted, more balanced, and in tune with ourselves.

But what does that entail, exactly? How can we apply advice and techniques that have survived over centuries to rediscover what it means to be human? Can fasting, walking, and spending time with nature really make us feel better? What are flow states? How do relationships-or lack thereof-impact physical health? And what can the healthiest and happiest communities out there today reveal about the secret to good living?

Answer these questions and more with the 10 episodes of Ancient Wisdom for the Modern World. Sit in on a series of expert interviews moderated by artist and inspirational speaker Prince EA. You'll

Examine "blue zones"-where people are the healthiest and live the longest-to figure out why their inhabitants live so well;
Discover the health benefits of walking and intentional grounding;
Deconstruct your diet so you can eat better and feel better overall;
Figure out how to build and maintain lasting, meaningful relationships;
Discover flow states, forest bathing, tantra meditation, and grateful thinking;
And so much more.
Ancient Wisdom for the Modern World takes a fun, interactive, hands-on approach that goes beyond listening and taking notes. Through carefully designed homework assignments delivered to you at the end of every episode, you can start to build good habits from the second you press play. Hit key goals and benchmarks as you move through the course. Test out meditation techniques, walking exercises, and specific diet plans. And walk away with a real sense of what works-and what doesn't-for you. Ancient Wisdom for the Modern World doesn't hand you a one-size-fits-all approach but, instead, provides you with the requisite knowledge and tools you will need to build a simpler, more balanced, "de-convenienced" life.

From Old Worlds to Blue Zones

Ancient Wisdom for the Modern World looks backward so you can look forward to a healthier, happier, and more balanced life. Focus on the ancient world and the people who inhabited it. How did they live? And more importantly, what did they think, write, and say about the way they lived? Across 10 episodes, you'll dive into and become inspired by Chinese, Indian, Native American, Egyptian, and Greek philosophies. You'll get to know famous thinkers like Socrates, Seneca, and Luther Standing Bear. And you'll discover a range of old techniques that have powerful modern applications.

That's not all, though. While this series is all about looking to the ancients for inspiration, you'll also have a look at some contemporary communities known as "blue zones" that are "vibing and thriving" according to ancient wisdoms in Italy, Japan, and even California. See what makes them tick, from the foods they eat to the relationships they have with each other, to the habits they practice every day. Explore the cutting-edge research that's centered around and inspired by them. And learn with both ancient and contemporary communities as your reference point to begin a process to improve your life for the better.

Ancient Wisdom from Modern Experts

Prince EA, though front and center throughout the course, won't be the only expert you'll get to meet. You'll sit down with a range of professionals from sociologists to athletes who talk to you about topics they've spent their lives thinking about and studying. Learn from some of the best, brightest, and most experienced people about how you can

Live an active lifestyle. Twenty-first century lifestyles are extremely sedentary-but worry not. Walking a little bit more each day can do wonders. Talk to Francis Sanzaro about "intentional grounding" techniques to see how you can not only walk more but walk meaningfully and holistically as well.
Eat better. It's not just what we eat; it's how often, too. Chat with Shawn Stevenson about the benefits of fasting on a molecular and physiological level before trying to work out which fasting program makes the most sense for you.
Connect with nature. The only jungles that surround us nowadays are made of concrete. Yet, nature-and more importantly, a strong connection to it-can be a special space. Reconnect with Francis Sanzaro to learn about forest bathing, a popular Japanese stress relief technique.
Improve performance. You can half the amount of time it takes to master a skill if you've entered a flow state. Discover what it means to be in the flow-chemically and neurologically-by talking to expert Steven Hotler, a human performance researcher at the Flow Research Collective.
Build meaningful relationships. Few things matter more than the relationships we have. Discover the importance of social contact and, conversely, the danger of isolation, before learning about the psychology behind social connection across all stages of life from Marisa G. Franco.
Think more positively. Negativity-once key to human survival-can do a lot of damage to body systems today. But it doesn't have to be this way. We've got a lot to be thankful for: relationships, careers, health, nature. Discuss with Dr. Christine Carter the social and personal benefits of gratitude.
Relax. Meditation is all the rage right now, but it comes in so many different shapes and sizes. Sit down with Dr. Sadhvi Bhagawati Saraswati to discuss tantra meditation specifically, utilizing her academic and personal experiences with the power of this ancient relaxation technique.
Get to know the people working on the psychology of relationships, the runners connecting with the natural worlds around them, and the neuroscientists testing and retesting flow to measure human performance. In Ancient Wisdom for the Modern World, this diverse group of experts helps you help yourself by providing a roadmap to experience life the way it ought to be experienced, with no distractions.

What Will You Learn?
Explore the evolutionary biology, history, and philosophy behind the steps we take and learn an intentional grounding technique

Investigate different types of diets and examine the history of intermittent fasting

Ponder how ancient views of love and companionship have endured over time, and find out how we can forge and maintain quality friendships


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BIM- Dynamo for Revit- Master Class
Last updated 10/2024
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Language: English | Duration: 28h 26m | Size: 23.4 GB

Mastering Dynamo and Generative Design: From Fundamentals to Advanced Techniques- Complex Forms and Data Management



What you'll learn
Introduction to Dynamo: Environment and Node Basics
Creating Basic Shapes with Point and Line Nodes
Generating Sequential Numbers with Code Block and List Nodes
Advanced Shape Creation with Circle, Polygon, and Ellipse Nodes
Creating Furniture Forms with Rectangle and Plane Nodes
Adding Volume to Shapes with Extrude and Loft Nodes
Transforming and Mirroring Shapes with Translate and Mirror Nodes
Creating Complex Shapes with Nurb and Polycurve Nodes
Advanced Shape Manipulation with Offset and Sweep Nodes
Building Tower and Bridge Forms with Advanced Nodes


Requirements
Basic Knowledge about Revit


Description
Do you want to know how to automate tasks in Revit using Dynamo?Do you want to know how to optimize your complex Revit models for performance and efficiency?Do you want to know how parametric design can help in creating complex shapes and designs in architecture and engineering?The Dynamo course covers the fundamentals of using Dynamo in building information modeling. The course starts with an introduction to Dynamo's environment, node types, and integer and number values. It then moves on to more advanced topics such as creating forms parametrically, creating circles, polygons, and ellipses using nodes, and extruding shapes. You will also learn to manipulate geometry using translation and mirroring. The course includes several exercises to reinforce learning, including creating a multi-story parking garage, a forest tower, and Athens Olympic Sports Complex by Calatrava.Headlines:Dynamo Fundamentals: Getting Started with Node-Based DesignBuilding Custom Shapes: Exploring Integer and Number Values in DynamoCreating Parametric Forms: Using Line and Circle Nodes in DynamoAdvanced Geometry: From Regular Polygons to Lofted Solids in DynamoPractical Applications: Extruding Shapes and Creating Curved Surfaces in DynamoParametric Modeling: Using Transpose, Offset, and Sweep Nodes in DynamoMastering Curves: Using Polycurves and Fillet Nodes in DynamoDynamic Design: Creating Custom Forms with NURBS and Control Points in DynamoAdvanced Techniques: Using List Manipulation and Lacing in DynamoFrom Sketch to Structure: Building Complex Forms with Dynamo's Node-Based WorkflowThis course is packed with real-life examples that immerse you in project situations and facilitate effective learning. Additionally, you're encouraged to ask any questions you may have while watching the course, ensuring a comprehensive understanding of the subject matter.

Who this course is for
BIM Modelers
BIM Coordinators
Revit Users
BIM Managers
Architects
Engineers

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Jack Sparrow/Johnny Depp Likeness in Blender
Published 10/2024
Created by Bharat Sharma
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 47 Lectures ( 21h 33m ) | Size: 21.6 GB

The only Likeness Portrait course you will ever need to make Realistic looking Portraits !!



What you'll learn
Full Portrait Creation Workflow
Head Sculpting
Much more Artistic and Manual Workflow
Skin Detailing in Blender
Brushes Creation for Skin Details
Texture Painting in Blender
Cloth Sculpting and Materials
Hair Grooming using Blender's New Hair System that uses Geometry Nodes
Free to create project


Requirements
Little bit of blender and sculpting knowledge is required


Description
My name is Bharat Sharma and I'm Freelance 3D character artist.This course is in the Language Hindi so make sure you understand that.This project is one of my favorite's that I have worked on and I wanna share all the info and the workflow through which I was able to create this portrait with the use of free but awesome software called Blender. This workflow does not include the use of any third party resources from internet (other than free basemesh) but we do everything in blender and own our own to achieve all the skin details in the portrait.This whole Project is free to create you won't need any paid 3rd party Resources to Achieve this much amount of Details.This Course is made for Character artist on intermediate level where we are gonna learn about full Portrait creation in Blender which also include Likeness. We are gonna learn to Create Likeness, Brush making for Skin Details, Texture painting, Hair grooming using New Hair system which uses Geometry nodes.This Course contains- 22 Hours of Content - 45 lectures- Resource files Software you need for this courseBlender Gimp ( or any Image editing Software like Photoshop, krita etc ) Both of these software are free.So you can start this journey straight away !! Watch the Index Video for more Info !!What will you get with this course.- 22 hours Lectures- Brushes for skin detailing- All the Important Files- Final render fileYou can contact me on Udemy if you have any problems.

Who this course is for
Beginner who have learned blender and sculpting but cannot translate that to Real looking portrait and cannot get the likeness right

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TTC - How the Crusades Changed History
Released 11/2023
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 24 Lessons ( 11h 27m ) | Size: 9.55 GB



The Crusades, launched in 1095 by Pope Urban II, were a series of holy wars led by European Christians, aimed at contesting Muslim power and establishing Christian rule of the Holy Land. In their aftermath, the Crusades left a significant impact on their era as well as on future centuries, and their effects are directly visible even in our own time

Effects of the Crusades included the following

They opened major avenues of exchange of learning and scholarship, as well as new knowledge of Islam in the European world.
They opened routes of trade, influenced European languages, and facilitated the first large-scale efforts of Christian proselytizing among Muslims.
They deeply influenced the policy of the Spanish in their conquest of the Americas.
They changed and even transformed areas of the world they touched.
In How the Crusades Changed History, you'll explore the ethos of the Crusades, their geopolitical and cultural history, and the fascinating and critical questions surrounding their legacy. You'll assess the magnitude of their impact on future events and eras, and the ways in which they continue to capture our imagination today.

In doing so, you'll devote substantial study to the eight numbered Crusades between 1095 and 1270, the key crusading expeditions across Europe and Asia Minor, and you'll track the fortunes of the four crusader kingdoms or states in the Mediterranean, from their inception to their eventual fall. You will also learn of the spread of crusading to Europe itself.

How the Crusades Changed History is an updated and expanded version of an earlier and popular audio course that makes use of our improved video and graphics capabilities to bring the battles, the places, and the monumental human conflict of the Crusades to vivid life. At the center of this course is the masterful presentation of esteemed medieval scholar Philip Daileader of William & Mary, whose compelling evocation of the Crusades and finely honed perspectives on their repercussions make these 24 lectures a thrilling and revelatory experience. Professor Daileader is delighted to have the chance to revisit this timeless and hugely influential era, an epoch of enduring relevance to geopolitical, social, and religious issues of our own time.

Relive a Breathtaking Historical Drama

Unfolding over two centuries, the Crusades mark a pivotal moment in world history

The First Crusade captured Jerusalem, igniting a crusading epoch of eight papally sanctioned crusades, as succeeding factions of crusaders sought to preserve and consolidate Christian control of the Eastern Mediterranean.
The Crusades in the Holy Land gave rise to further campaigns driven by religion across Western Europe, the Balkans, and the Byzantine Empire.
These extraordinary and galvanizing conflicts mobilized hundreds of thousands of crusaders, vast financial and logistical resources, and produced bitter conflict, difficult religious and moral quandaries, and a huge loss of life. Led by European kings, religious luminaries, knights, and nobles, the Crusades were marked by heroism, brutal warfare, and the large-scale clash of civilizations, as the kingdoms of Christian Europe endeavored to challenge Islamic power.

What caused the Crusades? What were their political and religious consequences? And why do they deserve our attention now?

A penetrating look at the Crusades shows that they weakened the foundations of Catholicism and its dominion over European Christendom and played into the specific processes that led to the Protestant Reformation. Ultimately, the crusaders' efforts paved the way for the collapse of the Byzantine Empire, the rise of the Ottoman Turks, and the spread of Islamic rule into parts of world it hadn't touched.

In our own era, the use of Crusades rhetoric by heads of state, Western conservatives and Islamic militants directly echoes the Crusades' ideology of holy war, and shows that, centuries after their end, the Crusades are not forgotten.

Travel Deeply into the Crusaders' World

In a multidimensional approach to the story, you'll begin by investigating both the long term and more immediate historical factors that set the stage for the Crusades, from tensions between the papacy and the Byzantine Empire to the incursions of Turks into Byzantine lands, leading to the call for the First Crusade. From there, you'll delve into the integral events of the conflicts, such as

The First through Fourth Crusades-In rich detail, study the harrowing events of the First Crusade, with its disastrous beginning and ultimate conquest of Jerusalem; the Second Crusade's failed siege of Damascus; the Third Crusade, pitting Richard Lionheart of England against the legendary Saladin; and the Fourth Crusade, culminating in the sack of Constantinople.
Christian Kingdoms in the East-Follow the First Crusade's creation of four crusader states: the kingdom of Jerusalem, Antioch, Edessa, and Tripoli. Track the volatile history of these Christian-ruled domains, and their ultimate demise, ending the crusading era. Learn the intriguing role of the Templars, Hospitallers, and other orders of religious knights.
The Fourth through Eighth Crusades-Witness the debacle of the Fifth Crusade's siege of Damietta, Egypt; the Sixth Crusade's highly unusual and short-lived recapture of Jerusalem; and unpack the final crusades, both led by Louis IX of France, with the crusaders' dramatic capture in Egypt and their final campaign against Tunis, marking the last Crusade in the Holy Land.
The Transformation of Crusading-Observe how crusading turned inward to the European interior, in a range of military campaigns that were granted Crusade status. Study the reconquest of the Muslim-ruled Spanish peninsula; chart the crusades that targeted the heretical Cathars and the German Hohenstaufen dynasty, as crusading turned against major former crusaders.
Grasp the Legacy of an Epic Conflict

As the course concludes, you'll focus on core themes in the story of the Crusades, illustrating the complexity and human dimensions of the conflicts, such as

The Crusades on the Ground-Take a hard look at the experience of crusading; investigate the motives of the crusaders, the preparations for going on crusade, and the calamities of hunger, disease, and warfare the crusaders faced. Visualize life in the crusader states, and the tensions between the Christian settlers and the local Muslim populations they ruled.
An Interface of West and East-Discover how the Crusades brought a deepened contact and interchange between the Christian West and the Islamic world; note the impact of Muslim culture on the West in the transmission of scholarly texts and the Islamic numerical system, and the concomitant advent of Christian missionizing in the Islamic East.
Crusading and Faith-Throughout the course, assess the religious features of crusading, including the spiritual aspirations of crusaders, their crusading vows, and papal authorities' promises of the remission of sins in return for going on crusade (the "plenary indulgence"). Explore the relationship between crusading and missionary work, and debates over whether the two were antithetical.
An Epoch that Marked the World-At the conclusion of the Crusades to the Holy Land, come to terms with their political and religious aftereffects. Witness how the Fourth Crusade's dismemberment of the Byzantine Empire facilitated the rise of the Ottomans, and how the mercenary use of religious indulgences compromised the standing and integrity of the Catholic Church.
In How the Crusades Changed History, you'll travel into a vastly impactful human drama, reflecting political and religious dilemmas that continue to resonate today.

What Will You Learn?
Examine the history of pilgrimage and holy war within Christianity before the Crusades

Learn about Pope Urban II's call for the first Crusade, and the motives that impelled crusaders to join the expedition

Witness how the Fourth Crusade's dismemberment of the Byzantine Empire facilitated the rise of the Ottomans

Grasp how the mercenary use of religious indulgences weakened the moral authority of Catholicism during the Protestant Reformation



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